Resorting, not wholly without justification, to the welcome cliché of ‘in all sincerity‘, I’d stopped watching Paddington on account of having binged it to the early hours of the 2015 springtime morning(s) and back. Go on, ask me what the ship’s name was. I dare you.

Watching it through the, highly subjective, lens of ‘acts‘, ‘plot’ and the titular subplots and character purpose made it worth the, I can assure you, ‘nth‘ time, made it worthwhile again.

A screenwriting book I read earlier this year, for want of its title, said that scripts should have opposing forces for their protagonists to resonate well. Ahead of the screenwriting commentary, director Paul King keeps the plot’s focus from near-start to finish on Paddington’s struggle to be accepted by the whole Brown family whilst making Millicent’s schemes, and their defeat, a key part of that story. Every story beat, interpreted to coincide with the end of each equally-subjectively interpreted act below, only builds up Paddington’s quest for acceptance. That being said…

(from left to right) co-screenwriter Hamish McColl and Oliver Parker during an interview for the 2016 film, Dad’s Army (Comedy.co.uk Photo)

The titular stretch of commentary: the screenplay has a pleasant level of culmination for most of its supporting cast in a way that both contributes to and pulls from Paddington’s quest for acceptance. To illustrate this point:

Mr Brown transitions from his overcautious risk analyst self to a more carefree state as seen in flashbacks.

Mrs Brown, over the course of Paddington’s journey and rescue, goes from artist’s block to finding the face of her book’s hero.

Judy transitions from being a self-conscious, Paddington-averse teenager to being comfortable with him in public and with introducing her boyfriend to Mrs Brown.

Jonathan, in conjunction with Paddington’s resilience and Mr Brown’s aforementioned transition, goes from being creatively repressed to being inventive, and allowed to be, publicly.

Mrs Bird, the Browns’ housekeeper, mirroring Mr Brown’s transition, also goes from her wound-up self to a more carefree state.

Millicent, in a subjective Revolutionary Road-esque circle, and despite wanting to honour her father in her own way, winds up as her late father did: working at a petting zoo.

You see? Subplots can be cool.

Star Ben Whishaw at the Paddington world premiere in London (Zimbio.com Photo and Caption)

While the physical motion-capture was done by Javier Marzan, Ben Whishaw’s voiceover is cosistently endearing, even in mortal peril, to Paddington’s plight. That being said, and given Nicole Kidman’s Millicent’s quest to honour her father’s work, her’s and Paddington’s journey are somewhat mirror-opposites. This is in that both are honouring an older parental-figure’s aspirations – at a stretch given how M Clyde was opposed to bringing the Ursa Marmaladus back to England – and either succeed or fail at it. You can’t have one without the other as such.

Paddington composer, Nick Urata (right-hand side), at the 2015 British Music Awards (Zimbio.com Photo and Caption)

The score, courtesy of Ruby Sparks composer Nick Urata, is a mix of fairy tale-esque, dreamy, music box-y with a bit of danger in terms of vibe alone. That mixed with some jungle-y feel at the start with Marmalade Harvest, and original songs by D Lime and Tobago Crusoe also complement the tone of particular scenes.

Cinematographer Erik Wilson (centre) on the set of 2014’s Paddington (BritishCinematographer.co.uk Photo)

The cinemtography, courtesy of director of photography Erik Wilson, makes the film (largely) feel warm, homely and cozy, even in the snow, and especially juxtaposed against the rain, cold stone and cold shades of green: à la the taxidermy truck, Natural History Museum and the olive colours of Millicent’s home and clothes. The film also focuses heavily on homes and using them to convey a quality of sorts: à la Paddington’s jungle treehouse which is home with his aunt and uncle; the Brown household that also juxtaposes the different Browns’ stories; and Buckingham Palace that may represent Paddington’s homely perception, and momentary realisation thereof in the watchpost scene, of London.

That said, and in retrospect, Paddington is a dreamy, cozy adaptation of the subjectively stereotypical A Bear Called Paddington‘s plot of a bear finding his way and place in London that adds an opposing force to make its main plot correspondingly more poignant. Much like The LEGO Movie, also of 2014 fame, Paddington is a a treat for existing fans and fans-in-the-making of the Peruvian bear’s stories.

(While the opinions and observations cited above are the author’s own, the following sources were used for any facts cited in the article above: CIA.gov, Cinefex.com, IMDb.com, ScreenDaily.com, TheTelegraph.com)

Plot and Act-by-Act Breakdown:

Plot: a young Peruvian bear seeks a home in modern-day London

Prologue: Paddington’s life in the Peruvian jungle is destroyed following an earthquake there.